Virgin Ears: Karen Dalton, In My Own Time

Virgin Ears: Karen Dalton, In My Own Time

Her Voice is a Horn

By Jeff Johnson

You can’t make it without ever even trying. They aren’t her words, but wenever use our own words. We use thosethat are given to us, and if we use themwell, they sound like our own. Karen Daltonnever wrote a song that we know of, butshe left us with two albums. She was areluctant public performer who mostlysang for friends, and some of those friendsdecided to make sure other people couldhear evidence of her immense interpretivetalent.

A couple years ago I visited Seattle for the first time, taking care to hit every record store I could find. In one of them, I heard this amazing voice over the stereo, all aspirant h’s, voice like a horn. Who isthis? I asked the record-store dude behind the counter. He pointed to a vinyl copy of Dalton’s In My Own Time on the wall behind him. Can I buy that? I asked, and he chuckled and said it was his copy and that I’d pay about a hundred dollars for a used copy of the long-out-of-print vinyl. How could something so wonderful be out of print, I wondered, then realized it made sense that something so otherworldly was no longer of this world. I jotted down Dalton’s name and started looking for her music.

Last year, Dalton’s albums were reissued on CD, and recently, in a Los Angeles record store, I discovered that In My Own Time had been reissued on vinyl. I’d downloaded her albums online, so I was by that time familiar with her work, but now, listening to the vinyl, I’ve been reintroduced to her. As we wrap up the final issue of Kitchen Sink, a magazine that has meant so much to me for the past five years, this music is exactly what I need, as both a salve for my heart and a way to remind me that the songs I love are in my heart, as are the people who sing them, and the people with whom I sing my life.